Listen To:


Selected MP3s of guitar instrumentals, jazz, big band, and classic easy listening from the original vinyl.

Welcome to Guitars & All That Jazz

Welcome to Guitars & All That Jazz

Guitars & All That Jazz was a radio station that webcast via Live365 for 11 years, ending in June 2011. The playlist consisted of guitar instrumentals, jazz, big band, early rock 'n' roll, lounge music and classic easy listening.

I hope to share some of this music with you via this blog. Most of it will be taken from the original vinyl (LPs and 45s) , cassettes and the occasional commercially unavailable CD.

Here's hoping you'll find something to enjoy. Please note files are available only for a limited time.

I urge you to purchase the digital version of the albums featured, either on CD or via download, wherever possible.

Listen to the Music
There are now two music streams. Click the appropriate player to the right.
1. Guitars & All That Jazz: Five hours of the best in jazz, guitars and other instrumental gems. New songs are added weekly.
2. Tiki Shores: Music to sweep you away to a tropical isle, a South American dance floor or a bossa nova on the beach at Rio. About 4.5 hours of classic exotica music, Latin rhythms and bossa nova.
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Monday, July 29, 2013

Earl Bostic - Exercise (single)


Alto saxophonist Earl Bostic (1913-1965) was an acknowledged technical master of his instrument, but he remains unappreciated by many jazz purists who only know him for his rhythm-and-blues hits of the late 1940s and early '50s, including the chart-topping Flamingo in 1951.

Yet Bostic's rough tone is often cited as a major influence on John Coltrane, who told Downbeat magazine in 1960 that Bostic "showed me a lot of things on my horn."

Although Bostic made some jazz recordings early in his career it wasn't until he switched to his R&B style of a simple melody backed by a strong beat that he found major commercial success. He recorded prolifically for King Records through the 1950s.

Exercise, a strong R&B tune, was on the flip side of his 1957 single She's Funny That Way. The MP3 is taken from the 45 and has a bit of distortion due to vinyl wear and tear.

Exercise



The first appearance of Exercise on an album came in 1958 on the LP Invitation to Dance with Bostic.


Since the majority of the saxophonist's King recordings have been released on CD and/or as downloads a quick search should lead you to Exercise and any other Bostic tracks that might strike your fancy.

Here's the Bostic tune most people recognize.


Saturday, July 27, 2013

Denny Wright - Try a Little Tenderness (track)


Romantic Guitars was a compilation CD issued by the British label Hallmark in 1995. At that time Hallmark was still a label that put out quality releases rather than the dubbed-from-vinyl issues that have since become its stock in trade.

Denny Wright (more about him in a minute) was featured on seven of the 18 tracks on Romantic Guitars, with other contributions by Dick Abell and Jean-Claude Aprile.

Wright (1924-1992) was a British jazz and session guitarist best known for his association with skiffle musician Lonnie Donegan in the 1950s, where his playing attracted the attention of a young Paul McCartney. "I loved Carl Perkins, Chuck Berry, Buddy Holly and Lonnie Donegan's guitarist, Denny Wright, who was fantastic," McCartney told Guitarist magazine in 2004.

Wright also performed with jazz musicians such as Stephane Grappelli and Digby Fairweather and provided guitar on hits by the likes of Tom Jones, Dusty Springfield and Mary Hopkin.

No date is given for the recordings on Romantic Guitars nor are there any other session details. Below is one of Wright's contributions.

Try a Little Tenderness



Although the Romantic Guitars CD has long been out of print, the tracks by Wright and Abell are available on a download album from several sources.

Judging from this YouTube offering, Denny Wright had a bit of talent on the banjo as well.




Thursday, July 25, 2013

Robert Maxwell - Shangri-La


If anyone had predicted that harpist Robert Maxwell (1921-2012) would have a Top 10 hit at the height of the British invasion most people probably would have snickered, or at least raised their eyebrows. But that's precisely what happened with Maxwell's Decca recording of Shangri-La. The tune, which the harpist composed, became an exotica standard, along with another of his compositions, Ebb Tide.

Both Shangri-La and Ebb Tide had made their debuts on Maxwell's 1956 Mercury LP, The Harp in Hi-Fi. As you can see from the LP cover his billing at the time was somewhat more informal.


At any rate Shangri-La did not become popular until some 18 years later after Jackie Gleason began using it regularly on his show.

As well as the hit single there was also a Shangri-La LP that sold very well. The album was also released under the title Bewitched. I believe the latter title came first but I'm not absolutely sure of that. In any case both had exactly the same cover art. Here's Bewitched from that album.

Bewitched



There is a limited number of Robert Maxwell recordings available for download, including Shangri-La and Ebb Tide, but since he recorded those tunes tunes several times over his career it's debatable what version(s) you'd be getting. Both have also been available on CD compilations over the years.

It's also worth noting that a Maxwell recording of Shangri-La appeared in recent years on the soundtrack of the hit TV series Mad Men.

Here's Shangri-La, the Decca hit version I believe.


As a final note -- if you own records by Mickey Mozart (Little Dipper), the Nairobi Trio (Song of the Nairobi Trio) or the Fortune Tellers, those are all pseudonyms for Robert Maxwell.

Monday, July 22, 2013

Terry Lee and the Poor Boys - Driftin' (single)


The Poor Boys were the band that backed little known Minnesota rockabilly singer Terry Lee, whose real name was Bob Becker. Their entire recorded output appears to be four tracks for the Minneapolis label Soma in 1959. Only two of the tracks were issued at the time, with the other two turning up on a Norton Records EP in 1994.

Driftin' was the group's lone instrumental, providing the "B" side of the vocal single My Little Sue. Driftin' was written by the group's lead guitarist Dave Pederson.

Driftin'



Driftin' has made half a dozen appearances on so-called "white label" (polite term for bootleg) CDs, including this collection, issued by Collector Records of The Netherlands in 1995.


Minnesota Rockers is also available as a download from iTunes and other sources. Driftin' also turns up on a massive 123-song download compilation called The Birth of Surf, Vol. 2, although the tune seems to me to be pretty far removed from the surf music that would emerge a couple of years down the road.

It's important to note that all the recordings of Driftin' are sourced from vinyl, as the master recordings likely disappeared long ago.

Saturday, July 20, 2013

First Brass


The British-based First Brass ensemble released its self-titled album in 1986 on MA Music in Europe and A&M in North America. The group was the brainchild of trumpeter and composer Allan Botschinsky and producer Marion Kaempfert, the daughter of orchestra leader Bert Kaempfert. British trumpeter Derek Watkins and Dutch brothers Bart (trombone) and Erik Van Lier (trombone and tuba) completed First Brass

It's difficult to pigeonhole this group's music. It's not exactly jazz, although there are certainly jazz elements, and it's closer to that genre than to any other. Surprisingly most of the music is delightfully accessible, such as Kubismus 502. "Kubismus" is the German word for cubism and "502" refers to the length of the selection. Trumpeter Watkins is featured.

Kubismus 502



This was the only release by First Brass, although Botschinsky and Kaempfert's MA Music label released 15 more albums that featured such artists as Lee Konitz and Gary Burton. The First Brass album is available on CD at the MA Music website. It does not appear to have been made available as a download.

Here's another track from the album.




Thursday, July 18, 2013

The Family - Family Affair (45 single)


This mellow funk version of the Sly & the Family Stone hit was issued shortly after Sly's single topped the charts in 1971.

According to YouTube poster fonsoul, whose channel boasts an eye-popping collection of 1,500 soul, R&B and blues selections, The Family was a group of Philadelphia studio musicians that included Leon Huff on keyboards, Ronnie Baker on bass, Earl Young on bass, Roland Chambers on bass and Larry Washington on congas. This was the group that evolved into MFSB after a name change in 1973 to avoid confusion with a British rock band.

Producers Huff and Kenny Gamble put this single out on their North Star label. It was reissued in 1973 under the MFSB name on Philadelphia-International, which the producers had formed in '71. By this time MFSB had become the studio band that backed nearly all of the label's hit records as well as waxing their own instrumental recordings, including the 1974 No. 1 hit TSOP (The Sound of Philadelphia).

Family Affair



An extended version of Family Affair (4:21 as opposed to the single's 2:17) was included MFSB's self-titled 1973 album, which is available as a download and on a recently issued British CD.

The flip side of the original Family Affair single contained something called Nation Time, and here it is from fonsoul's collection.


Monday, July 15, 2013

The Swing Era 1940-1941 (Time Life box set)


Time-Life Records began issuing a series of three-LP box sets in 1970 that recreated the hits of the swing era. Most of the recordings were made by Billy May and His Orchestra, with some sets featuring tracks made by Glen Gray and a modern version of his Casa Loma Orchestra. All arrangements followed the original hits very closely.

Each box set (there were 14 of them) included a 64-page book. Despite the fact that these are not the original recordings The Swing Era series proved to be enormously popular -- one of Time-Life's biggest sellers. The records were pressed by Capitol Records Special Markets division and the pressings and stereo quality are top of the line.

Below is May's version of the Erskine Hawkins hit Tuxedo Junction, taken from the volume covering 1940-1941.

Tuxedo Junction



These Time-Life big band recreations were reissued at least three times in their entirety -- twice on vinyl box sets, with slightly different covers in the mid-1970s and entirely new covers later in the decade, and on CD, beginning in 1999. The track listings for the CDs varied from those on the LPs and the covers looked like this:


Reasonably priced vinyl box sets are easy to come by online. They also seem to populate thrift store shelves fairly often. The CDs, however, are harder to come by and seem to be quite pricey. These recordings haven't been marketed as downloads under The Swing Era title, but it's possible they're available on other compilations.

Here's another sample of the Swing Era series, this one taken from a CD. This time it's the Glen Gray Orchestra recreating Andy Kirk's Moten Swing.


Saturday, July 13, 2013

The Modernes - Swingin' Easy


The Modernes, whoever they were, played cocktail jazz designed to appeal to people who liked light instrumental music such as that put out by The Three Suns (Twilight Time), an enormously popular group that recorded for RCA Victor.

Swingin' Easy was put out in 1956 on Concert-Disc, a company that also issued their albums on two- and four-track reel-to-reel tapes. As befits a company whose main business was in tapes that appealed to audiophiles the stereo quality on this release is excellent. The same can't be said for the quality of the LP, which was pressed on hissy, crackling, cheap vinyl. I've cleaned up the sample track, which was taken from an LP, as much as possible without affecting the sound quality of the music to any great degree.

Besame Mucho



Swingin' Easy is available as a download from Amazon in Britain and France but not in North America. Whether The Modernes, none of whom is identified, made any other recordings is unknown to me. I've certainly seen no evidence of them.

Here's what the two-track stereo reel-to-reel tape version of Swingin' Easy looked like.



Thursday, July 11, 2013

The Bandits - The Electric 12


Here's another fine example of Glen Campbell's instrumental prowess. This one came out on World Pacific in 1965, just before Campbell's solo career took off.

Campbell is joined by some of the best on the Los Angeles session scene in the '60s, including Hal Blaine (drums), David Gates and Jerry Cole (guitars), Leon Russell (piano) and Larry Knechtel (bass). Campbell recorded a couple of other 12-string albums with basically the same group, but those LPs were more in the folk vein than the pop and rock 'n' roll on The Electric 12.

All of the tracks, with the exception of the Campbell-penned Bandito, were cover versions, including Petula Clark's hit, Downtown.

Downtown


The Electric 12 by the Bandits has never been released on CD, but it's available almost everywhere as a download, no doubt using an LP as the source.

From YouTube, here's another sample of the album.

Monday, July 08, 2013

Sonny Stitt - Soul Girl (2nd post)


This is the second go-round on the blog for this 1973 Sonny Stitt LP that mixed soul-tinged numbers with straight ahead jazz tunes. For more on Soul Girl read the earlier blog entry.

Jeep Blues is one of the straight ahead selections, with the MP3 taken from a cassette version of the album. Listen and/or download from the links below.

Jeep Blues



Here's Sonny Stitt from his 1956 Verve LP New York Jazz with a masterful interpretation of Body and Soul.


Saturday, July 06, 2013

Enoch Light & the Light Brigade - Eglantine (45 single)


The "A" side of this 1971 single by Enoch Light and the Light Brigade, a version of Paul Simon's Cecilia, was spotlighted in an earlier post.

The flip side of the 45, Eglantine, is taken from the score of the Disney family movie musical Bedknobs and Broomsticks. It's in a similar vein to the more highly regarded Mary Poppins.


Enoch Light's Dixieland-style version of Eglantine (but not Cecilia) was included on his 1972 album Movie Hits.


Since Eglantine has not made it into the digital domain your best bet is to use the links below to listen to and/or download the song.

Eglantine


Here's how Eglantine, the first name of the character played by Angela Lansbury, was heard in Bedknobs and Broomsticks.


Monday, July 01, 2013

The RKO Orchestra - Music from Studio X


Where did the "discriminating listener" turn on the radio dial for "an uninterrupted flow of lovely melodies" in the mid-1950s?

Apparently the Mutual Broadcasting System didn't think there was much choice -- and so was born, on July 9, 1956, Music from Studio X. The program was broadcast daily from a specially constructed studio at WOR in New York -- between 9:05 p.m.-1 a.m. Monday to Saturday and from 1:30 p.m-5 p.m. on Sundays. The show lasted until 1959.

Music from Studio X's menu of lush instrumental and vocal arrangements included many tunes composed especially for the program, including theme music by arranger Joe Leahy (1916-1974). Some of the originals were gathered for an LP on RKO Records, with Leahy acting as music director.


For some reason, this obscure LP was released on CD in 1999 with the cover pictured at the top of this post. Below is a sample, something called Two Minute Melody, which is actually about 15 seconds short of that mark.

Two Minute Melody


If this type of mood music appeals to you, you can pick up a used copy of the Music from Studio X CD for $5-$8 from a number of online sources.